Is the National List Serving its Purpose?
by Manthri.lk - Research Team posted almost 11 years ago in Analysis
National list MPs contribute
25% more in Parliament
Opposition National Listers
are contributing double
The Parliament of Sri Lanka comprises 225 members: 196 (87%) are
directly elected from the 24 districts while 29 (13%) are indirectly elected as
National List MPs.
The Purpose of the National
List:
The purpose of having an instrument such as a National list is to enable
professionals, academics, and any such eminent persons to enter parliament,
without being disadvantaged by their lack of pre-established constituencies and
networks due to not being professional politicians. It’s meant for valuing and
drawing into parliament those who have made important investments in learning
and professionalism, in ways that do not accrue popular political recognition.
Is the National List a
Success?
That raises an important question. Are National List MP’s making a
significant extra contribution in Parliament, justifying their inclusion? Until
now there could only have been impressionistic answers to that question. But
the unique web based platform Manthri.lk is able to quantify and compare the
activity level of every member in parliament, so the question can be answered
with some precision.
And, the answer is…
Overall then, National list MPs
contribute 25% more in parliament, but this
is driven by the National Listers in the Opposition. Government national
listers in fact, contribute about 10% less on average than district list MPs.
It would seem that the National List is serving its purpose – but only
because of the opposition appointments. Those appointed to the National List
from the government are not living up to the expectations of the system.
Analysis of Performance:
Looking at the data on
parliamentary activity between May 2012 and August 2013, shows that on average,
national list MPs contributed 25% more in terms of net productive time in
parliament than District List MPs.
But their contributions are not equally impressive. There are 4 national
list MPs amongst the top 22 contributors (top 10%) in parliament. These are (in
order): Anura Kumara Dissanayake (JVP), A.H.M Azwer (UPFA), Harsha de Silva
(UNP), and Eran Wickramaratne (UNP) But there are also 4 national list MPs
amongst the bottom 10%.
The opposition has 12 and the governing coalition has 17 National List
MPs. The average contribution of an
Opposition National List MP was double that of a government National List MP.
How the National List Works:
Political parties receive their National list allocation based on the
proportion of votes received throughout the nation, not just in one district
(hence the term “National List”).
A Political party must announce its National list candidate prior to an
election, and is expected to make their appointments from it. Unlike in the
case of a district MPs, where the voter indicates their top three preferences,
there is no opportunity to indicate a preference for National List MPs. That is
why they are considered INDIRECTLY
elected, through the vote for the party.
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